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Pompeiian Villa

Port Arthur, Jefferson County

Marker Text

The last remaining landmark of the "dream city" planned by the founder of Port Arthur, railroad magnate Arthur E. Stilwell (1859-1928). The house was built in 1900 as the winter resort home of Isaac L. Ellwood (1833-1910), the developer of barbed wire. The same year financier John W. "Bet-A-Million" Gates (1855-1911) had a mansion built nearby. It was razed in 1960. Ellwood sold the villa in 1901 to James Hopkins of St. Louis, who in 1903 sold it to George M. Craig (1862-1950), principal developer of Port Arthur, for 10 per cent of the Texas Company (present Texaco, Inc.). Craig lived here until his death.

Marker Details

Address 1953 Lakeshore Dr.
Location Description
Marker # 10553
Dedicated 1973
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code inventors and inventions; railroads; houses, residential buildings; land surveys, land companies, promotional towns
Latitude, Longitude 29.882465, -93.922525

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